Right now AT&T charges $30 per month for 3 GB of data. That’s data you bought. With your money. AT&T’s 3 GB plan lets you use the data to surf the web, check emails, stream video or music, and use apps that require data. But if you want to use your smartphone as a wi-fi hotspot, you have to shell out an extra $20 per month for that privilege. For many the 3 GB plan would be enough. It’s even more baffling considering AT&T will gladly charge you $10 for an extra GB if you go over your 3 GB allotment. The company is still getting your money.

ArsTechnica notes that when trying to activate FaceTime over cellular in the iOS 6 settings, a pop-up appears, instructing users to either call AT&T or go to its website in order to enable the feature on their accounts. As noted by MacRumors, it’s the same message that pops up when AT&T subscribers try to enable data tethering on their iOS devices—another for-pay service.

They can’t offer LTE over Dish’s 2.1 GHz spectrum for 3-4 years. Clear’s 2.6 GHz spectrum lacks coverage and their own 2.3 GHz proposal lacks a nationwide footprint or timeliness. TV band “incentive auctions” will be stuck in politics all decade.